HDMS Dannebrog
The Danish ironclad Dannebrog was an armored frigate of the Royal Danish Navy that was originally
built as an 80-gun ship-of-the-line by Andreas Schifter was launched in 1850 but was reconstructed into a steam-powered ironclad in the early 1860s. She had an uneventful career before the ship was stricken from the navy list in 1875. The ship was converted into an accommodation ship that same year and served until she became a target ship in 1896. Dannebrog was broken up in 1897.
Description after conversion
Dannebrog was long between perpendiculars, had a beam of and a draft of. The ship displaced. She had a single steam engine that drove her propeller. The engine, built by Baumgarten & Burmeister, produced a total of which gave the ship a speed of. For long-distance travel, Dannebrog retained her three masts and was barque rigged. Her crew numbered 350 officers and crewmen.Sources disagree about the ship's armament; naval historians Paul Silverstone and Robert Gardiner say that she had sixteen 60-pounder guns, but Johnny E. Balsved shows her with a dozen 60-pounder, 88-cwt., guns, two 60-pounder, 150-cwt. guns, and three 18-pounder guns immediately after her conversion. All of these were rifled muzzle-loading guns. Balsved then shows that she was rearmed with six 60-pounder, 150-cwt. and eight 24-pounder guns, all RMLs, after 1865 while Silverstone gives her a later armament of six and ten RML guns. Dannebrog had a wrought-iron waterline armor belt thick and her battery was protected by armor plates of the same thickness.